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September 9, 2009

5

Is Your Social Media Content For Your Fans A Dead Zone?

notweets1Everyone wants a following on the web, everyone wants fans, people who are checking in to see what you are up to. Producing content helps to promote you, it helps to promote your business. But think about what you are providing, what amount of original content do you produce on a weekly basis?

Let’s take Twitter for example. What do you send out to share when you are on Twitter? A new article on Mashable? A link to a post on 12 favorite designer tips by someone else? Are you spending a lot of time promoting other people’s work and websites? Or are you sending out your own content, a new blog post, new video, audio clip, photo work, an interview that was done with you, a new project you are working on? Your thoughts, your art, your work? What original content was created this week that could not have happened without you?

As your following grows, you begin to peak people’s interest in you more and more, they will start to search on content that involves you. They will go to your website, check out your social networks, start investigating. They start to like you, they want more, so what can you provide them? 

Take a look at anyone who has been successful in branding themselves on the web. They almost always have a large selection of archived and weekly new content that they are dishing out. It keeps people coming back. It ensures that people are sending around their links.

Conversations happen all the time on the web and when you become vocal people will become intrigued with you and look for more about you. Ideally it is good to have a body of work that is constantly being added to so people can get to know you better.

When you build your following people will start to like you. As you grow bigger, people will start to like you and a lot will start to dislike you. Once you start getting anti-fans, you know you are making it. If everyone pretty much universally likes you online, work to become bigger and/or more vocal.

Now I know, creating content is time consuming. But it should be done if you want to grow your presence online. And it does not have to be perfect, it just needs to be developed and released on an ongoing basis. You only need to look at the people you admire and respect online to see how they are building a following. They will often have a lot of clients, business and connections online, because their volume of content has drawn people in. Instead of working at trying to make contacts and potential clients on social networks, searching for connections, they build their own network of content and info, then people come to them.

Conversations are nice to have online. But conversations about you and your work are even better.

What have you sent out to the web this week that brings people into your brand?

Facebook comments:

  • http://hammer2010.com Alex Hammer for Governor of Maine

    Like your efforts in social media!!

  • Franklin McMahon

    Thanks :)

  • http://twitter.com/pramitjnathan Pramit J. Nathan

    Hi Franklin,

    Firstly, congratulations! Your post made me think, and that is a quality which majority of blog posts on so many mediocre blogs lack. I guess the reason is that too many people have for the wrong reasons taken to blogging without having the necessary competency to do so. I am the all for original content but at the same time I also respect those who promote others content.

    I will refer from one of the comments I had made on a similar post before @ http://openpresswire.com/twitter/youre-not-a-social-media-expert-you-idiot/
    ———————————————————————————-
    While some create others disseminate.
    If nothing succeeds like success, then their (of the content promoters) follower base on various social networking platforms is enough evidence of their expertise. Their role in social media achieving the tipping point cannot be undermined. They are the channel between the manufacturers (content creators) and the consumers (content readers) while being the biggest consumers themselves.
    ———————————————————————————-
    Hope to read more such thought provoking content from you.

    Best,
    Pramit

  • Franklin McMahon

    My take is to use social networks to introduce others to your original content. These are powerful tools, so why not spread the word about what you do. I think sometimes the problem is when people look at the network contributions as original content.

    Social media content is gone after a day or two typically. Poof. The hours you put into it are pretty much virtually erased. The months. The years.

    I like to see a balance. I often see people who used to update their blog daily now on twitter hourly. So when I “check in on them” I miss the 3 weeks on Twitter, I just see the blog not updated in 3 weeks. Look at a musician for example, they could be spending hours in the studio crafting tunes or hours on twitter talking about tunes. Ideally it could be both. A balance.

    My article was just a reminder, don’t forget to create. With so much work put in, and hours, to social media, why not share your own thoughts, ideas, craft, projects, etc. I would rather see that from people as a link than anything else.

  • Franklin McMahon

    I just read the article you linked to..very interesting! :)